Thursday, June 14, 2018

Korn Ferry: Raises Have Arrived…In the Public Sector

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Ancient prophets once wrote that seven years of feasts would get followed by seven years of famine. These stories pushed the idea that neither good nor bad times last forever. But now reality is mimicking the parables.
For the last seven years, the one million-plus workers in the National Health Service, the U.K.’s state-funded health system, have received just a 1% raise annually. But this month the U.K. government agreed to raise wages 6.5% over the next three years, more than doubling the recent annual increases. Read more here.

Monday, June 11, 2018

Forbes: A Deep Look Inside The Gig Economy

By SIMON CONSTABLE

How good or bad is the so-called gig economy compared to holding a permanent staff role? It all depends who you ask.

Sarah Kessler, author of Gigged: The End of the Job and the Future of Work, spoke with more than a few people about the matter and discusses it at length in her book which is scheduled for publication June 12. Read more here.


Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Korn Ferry: In Spain, Italy-- Surviving a Void

By SIMON CONSTABLE

It isn’t something one would expect to see, two major European nations without leaders at the same time. But that’s where Italy and Spain found themselves last week—and where a surprising number of companies find themselves as well. 
For those who missed the headlines, Italy went three months without a majority government, until two major parties finally agreed last Friday on a new prime minister. Meanwhile, a few hundred miles west, Spain’s government collapsed after the prime minister was unseated in a no-confidence vote, and experts wonder how long the new government will last. But as unnerving as this can be, leadership vacuums are of course not limited to politics. Indeed, from abrupt CEO departures to boardroom succession battles, such voids are becoming more common and troubling. Read more here.

Monday, June 4, 2018

P.J. Media: Numbers Don't Bear Out Corbyn's Claims on 'Soaring Inequality'

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Has Britain’s Jeremy Corbyn become king of the political fibbers? Maybe so.
The ultra-leftist leader of the country’s Labour Party won’t let up from pushing the idea that the divide between those on high incomes and the rest of the population is only getting worse.

The problem is that the pontificating politician hasn’t checked the facts. Worse still, he fails to mention how much better off even the poorest have become these past few decades. Read more here.
Parliament

WSJ: What Is CCAR?

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Over the next few weeks, the abbreviation CCAR, which stands for Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review, is likely to crop up in news articles and online posts. It matters for anyone who follows the U.S. banking industry. Read more here.



WSJ: Emerging Markets Have a Dollar Problem

By SIMON CONSTABLE
Emerging-markets stocks have been pummeled lately, and the strength of the dollar gets much of the blame.
“The dollar remains the single most important consideration for EM [emerging-markets] finances,” says a report from debt-ratings company Fitch. In general, a stronger dollar tends to mean lower stock prices in emerging markets. Read more here.
Photo by Alexander Mils on Unsplash